Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Feb. 23, 1905, edition 1 / Page 4
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? . ALWAYS CALL FOR A CIGAR BY ITS NAME to MEANS MORETHAN ANY OTHER-NAME BAXT03 GOOD F0 PKZ3ZVT8 seller tstaeWerls." s EED CORN south. Sample sni Catalog FREK R. F. DAtTOX, Til 6ROTE 8'1'HMT, 9AXTILLB, VA. -r B Power From Artesian .Well. .- -: At St Augustine, Fla., is the onlj mill In the world that gets its powei direct from an artesian well. Tfce V. 8. Dept. ef Aarrlcwltwre) saves - to oaizer s uau its nearuest aorseroent. Sakers Hew. National Oats yielded rin 1904 from, 150 to 300 bu.per ere in 30 different States, and yooyMr. Farmer, caa beat this in 1903, if you will. Spelt r or Emmer, above illustrated, gives 80 bushels grain and four tons hay besides per acre. It's wonderful. Salter's seeds are pedigree seeds, bred np through careful selection to big yields. Per Acre. Saber's Beardless Barley yielded . ; 121 ba. Sejzer's Home Builder Corn... w 300 bu. fipeltz and Macaroni Wheat.... 80 ba. Salzer's Victoria Rape.. 60,000 lbs. Salter's Tecsinte Fodder ...100,000 lbs. Salzer's Billion Dollar Grass... 50,000 lbs. "Salzer's Pedigree Potatoes 1,000 bo. Now such yields pay and yon can bar -them, Mr. Farmer, in 1905. stkd 10c ec stavts -sad this notice to the John A. Salrer Seed 0., La Crosse, Wis., and yon will get herr big catalog and Iota of farm seed samphw free. A. C. L.J Carried Swarming Bees Three Mile. Leander Cordi, a boy aged 14, of I Redding, Cal., walked three miles with a rwara of bees clustered on his right arm from elbow down. He hived the ees at home, was stung only once on the wrist, where he accidentally crashed one of the Insects, and is now the hero of the hour. FITS nerns anon tlv cured. No fits or nervous ness after first dar's use of Dr." Kline's Great HerveRestorer.$2trial bottleand treatise free Dr. B. EL Kwxii. Ltd., 931 Arch St.. Phila Pa. - Poof eardens are now common features in Southern California. . X Guarantee! Car For File. Ttcbinr. Blind. Bleeding or Protrudinf Piles. . Druggists will refund money if Paeo Ointment fails to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50c A Formosa man must hare a license be fore he is allowed to smoke opium. Richest American Soil. s Something frequently happens that goes to prove the fertility of the soil in the Salt River valley. It Is nothing tinuEual -to hear, of -cutting several crops off one , field In one season;, grapes frequently bear two crops and s do figs. .The latest, however, Is re ported by James Goodwin, , He has in Ills yard a tree that to the casual ob server Is only an ordinary, pear tree. It was nothing more than this to Vr. Goodwin until this year. He had al ways noticed that it was of an early variety, and this season along in May a 'crop of pears was picked. A little Jater his Interest was aroused by notic ing the tree in full bloom again. What f s still more Interesting is that at the present time the tree has another fully matured crop of pears on it which are -now ripening as well as did the first rop. THE DISCOVERER Xt Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound, the Great Woman's Remedy for Woman's Ills. yaSJSSiSr hM "ceived 'uch widespread and Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound. TroJblMInfltSLr thf ,or8t orm of Femal Complaints, all Ovarian Vmb ad in? k D-d '?1eraJI- Falling and Displacement of the l5S Uial TeaknC Bnd U Peculiarly adapted to the arr1atn case of Backache and Lencorrbcea than any other rem SSLl. 1 haS, 6Yf r known- 11 is almost infallible in sucJ caseX 5 ttpmelt?nd the Uterus inan early indkS?P,4?.aiul struation;eakiess t the Stcnach, UynTckfy Vx?eld to it Vy&gi NeTUS tration' headache, Genera?Dtui ItenSv SSed and .rSbOUlles-, ?ftaar Pn, weight andbackache. in SSSaSstWfemir117?1 & itsuse - Under allcircumstances it f f i i femle Pystem, and is as harmless as water.' Sss Dzzineali lVal?e' feelin-r. excitability, irritability, nerrous 1hmZa SSf f,r,UM.to 7thlni.ta. k. riwwdrf hundred .DISFIGURING ULCER leIe Uok4 a JTer la X PnoouMd Iacwraale Face Now Cltsr as Krer Tbanks God For Cat! car. Mrs. P. Hackett. of 400 Van Buren St., sea, e w tsroeKiyn, n. i., says: x wian to give thanks for the marvelous eure of my moth er by Cnticura She had a severe ulcer, which physicians bad pronounced incur able. It was a terrible disfigurement, and people would stand in amazement and look after her. After-there waA.no hd$e from. doctors she. berah ...using Luticura Soap Ointment and Pills.' and now. thank God. she is completely cured, and her face is as smooth and clear as ever. Dog Captures a Burglar. Observing a light in'an unoccupied house in Geneva, , Switzerland, one night recently a policeman entered the window and left a trained police dog on guard outside. Almost immediately a man pushed past' him and dashed out of the house, but was promptly seized byv the dog, which sprang at his throat. A terrible struggle ensued, but thf animal, i? although , half stunned by blows from a "jimmy," succeeded in bringing the burglar, a notorious crim inal, to the ground, where it held him till its master" came and-secured tht 'captive, "i i " l '" : iflt- CONSTANT ACHING, f Bade aches all the time. Spoils your appetite, wearies the body, worries the saind. Kidneys cause it all and Doan's Kidney Pills relieve a4 care it. EL B. MeCarver, f 201 Cherry ,St, Portland. Ore-, In specter of freight for tare Trans-Coo- Cv. says: IssaslDsww's Kld- PWaf far back and ether ot kid. mtf troubM wMen bad &SBM7jdsae for SBonfksL I tkiak eiU vti r ponai bte far tho whsle trosbSe. It s sauted to settle in my kid- Dean's Kidney Pills rooted it at. It Is several months since I used then, nnl np to date there has been no racnrreaoe of the trouble." Dona's Kidney Pills for sale by all dealers. Priee 80 cents per box. - Fos-ter-MIlbanx Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ' Audacity Wen Captain. In the days of frontier army posts and Indian fighting a certain captain fras as famous for his courage as he was notorious for his love of liquor. One night he thought he heard s burglar In his quarters, so, pistol in hand, he stepped across the hall to tne dining room door. Sure enough, there stood an intru der at the sideboard, where the silver ware was displayed. , "What are you doing there?" said the captain, covering his man with the gun. - , "Getting a drink of whisky." th burglar answered, calmly filling a glass from one of the captain's bottlea The fellow's serene audacity ap pealed to the brave captain. "Say." said he, lowering the pistol, -make it two." The attack upon tire divorce laws and upon divorce suits continue, in the pulpit and, to some extent, in the pressj. The real difficulty with re form Is not the unwillingness of pub- le bodies to met, say the Newark Sunday Call, but tlie feeling that th remedies suggested for the unhappy growth nt divorce are not satisfac tory. There's a world of difference be tween faith and credulity. So. 4. a .... . -M SOUTHERN FARU TOPiCS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTER, STOCKMAMAND TRUCK GROWER. Tklrty Tsars' Kxporlanea In Berry Frnit Thirty years old 'in any "one line of business , is quite patriarchial, for this has been a generation of changes and frequent adjustments and readjustments. It has not fallen to the lot of many men to hold to one thing for so near the third part of the century. I consider myself fortunate that fate" has permitted me to bend virtually all the energies of my life to one thing, given me time and op portunity to master it in proportion to my abilities and to reap a reward that seems to me greater than my deserts. And still more fortunate am I in that I have had sons to grow up around me, profiting by my experience, to see more broadly and reach higher, making my plans and aims ' their plans , and aims, but larger. But I am not writing a family history, but a treatise on fruit growing. . " In that thirty years I learned many things and had to unlearn many things. What I had to chiefly unlearn was that the old system of manuring fruits was wrong. To me and to my average contemporaries in those days manure was manure and fertilizer fertilizer. It occurred to ""us dimly, if at all, that as different animate required different kinds of food and in different propor tions, so did different plants and crops. And I will add that the loss from illy balanced manure and fertilizer in those dark days was enormous, and who will be bold enough to say that the dark days are even yet entirely past with all of us? '- " The three fertilizing properties which experience has proven should be added to the soil to In at? it productive are, as is well known, nitrogen, potash and phosphoric acid. AH of these are es sential, one as much as the other, but they are needed in different propor tions on different soils and for different crops, and their blind and injudicious use works loss in many ways. As nitrogen is the most expensive It is in that the greatest waste and loss occurs in the ignorant rise of fertilizers. The loss is greater In berry fruit growing than in any other crop we have, because more fer tilizer is used on this than is the cus tom on other crops and because the loss in quantity and quality through unwise manuring is so great In this crop. 1 . My largest, crops -of. fruit have-al-; ways come from the most liberal, use t)T fertilizer ivhen rightly , proportioned. Hy-argest crops of "disappointments have grown where the largest quan tity of illy balanced fertilizer was used. My experience Is that a perfectly balanced berry frnit fertilizer should contain at least two and one-half times as much potash and twice as much phosphoric acid as it contains am monia. My plan in planting strawberries, dewberries, blackberries, raspberries, etc., is to apply cottonseed meal in the drills before the plants are set at the rate of C00 to S00 pounds to the acre. This is sown in the drills and mixed with the soil and listed on just before the plants are set in winter or spring. After that no more nitrogen is used in any form until after the crop is gath ered the following year. I depend upon plenty of potash and phosphoric acid to make the fruit. Nor have I ever failed in my whole ex perience to make a good crop except one' year when hall destroyed about cnc-half. I apply potash in the form of sulphate of potash, which is decid edly the best form for all kinds, of fruit, using about 100 pounds per acre, usually mixed rwith 300 pounds of acid phosphate or dissolved bone. This mixture I sow broadcast over the plants during late fall and winter. It will undoubtedly pay to use a some what large quantity of both of these fertilizers either broadcast before the plants are set or else by chopping in around and between the plants during the summer' or early fall. Potash and phosphoric acid, as they are much less i liable to be washed out and lost than , ammonia is, can therefore be more lib erally used without loss, as most of the fertility of this kind remains in the soil until taken up by the plants. I will add that the largest yield of strawberries which I ever heard of being made In this State was grown by myself under the system of fertil izing above described. O. W. BLACKNALL. KittreU, N. C. ' soIIInjt. A few years ago we saw some red clay land, containing little humus, ub-soiled eight to ten inches. The work was done with an excellent two horse subsoiler drawn by two mules. That work was thrown away. Heavy spring rains solidified the clay. The zeal of the farmer doing the work was not according to knowledge. He knows bettei now. He will not repeat his er ror. But he is fully convinced of the great value of snbsoiling our. clay News of the Day. It has been calculated that, taking the population of the whole world, there is one newspaper to every 82,600 persons. The United States supports 12,500 newspapers, of which 1,000 are dailies, these being round figures. Ger many has 5,500 journals, of which 800 are daily. England takes second place in the European record with 3,000 news papers, of which 809 are daily. France has nearly the same number. In a collection of prison reports from the various States the interesting fact is disclosed that while convict white labor is much less efficient than free white labor, go much so that the best quality of manufactured articles can not be economically produced by con vict white labor, the negro does more work under a' convict contractor than in freedom, says the New York World. That is, the feeling of compulsory labor detracts from a white man's efficiency, while the pressure a labor contractor is in a position to exert produces more labor from a black man. I0TES lands. If he can break one or two inches of clay with one mule drawing a diamond noint tongue plow that is al he wants on land with a light top soILJ Following that with small grain and peas he incorporates humus into the soli and is ready then to break up two inches more of the clay. Thus by de grees in three years he will secure a ten-inch soil well charged with humus and capable of resisting heavy rains, or long droughts. Land should never be subsolled when the clay is wet and sticky. We saw a field prepared for wheat this falL In places the soil was shallow. A two-horse"turn-plow was used. The wet clay was brought to the top. where It remains in clod, and it will be there next spring. Break only so much of the hardpan or clay as can be incorporated with the top soil. This work should be done before the first of March. Any subsoillng that leaves the broken clay in a mass is worthless, as the first heavy rain will cause It to become soil .again. Progressive Farmer. TaJae of Cottnn-eed Meal. A pound of otton-seed meal is worth a pound and three-quarters of corn for feeding cattle, but when cotton-seed meal is fed and the manure saved with reasonable care, three-fourths of its fertilizer value may be regained in the droppings. Can we continue to waste three-fourths of the value of our cotton-seed meal because we have not learned, and apparently do not want to learn, to raise and care for live stock? At present the price of cotton-seed meal is based on its fertilizer value alone, but as its food value becomes better appreciated, the price will be deter mined by its combined fertilizer and feeding values. During the last ten years the price of meal has risen from $13 to 925 per ton, and I predict that during the next ten years it will ad vance to $35, because it is worth, that amount in comparison with the usual price of other food stuffs. Can we af ford to continue to use it as fertliizer alone, at that price, and ignore and waste its feeding value? We certainly need live stock to con sume this cotton-seed meal, for only by feeding it can we obtain its full value. The same principles a ie lnrolved when wo consider the disposition that should be made of .leguminous forage crops.- It is universally .admitted that', it , pays to grow -cowpeas -as a- .means -ef-"eoii Improvement; "for. even 'when the crop is cut for hay, there is still left to the soil, in the roots and stubble, from $2.50 to $3 worth of nitrogen for every ton of hay produced. But when this crop is grown, what shall we do with it? Every ton of this oowpea hay is worth at least $10 for fertilizer, at the price we pay for plant food in commer cial fertilizer. Progressive Farmers SabMlliajc With Or Uorro. A farmer came to us a few days ago saying that you are always telling us to break the hard pan and subsoil our land. You are no donbt correct, but what is a poor man with only one horse to do? This is our advice to him and all such farmers: Take pea stub ble that is intended for cotton next year. Tne leaves ana remnants or vines are now on the ground. They should be saved. Use a six-inch shovel and lay off the rows cotton width as early as possible. When this is done, take a' tongue or diamond point plow and run in the same fur row. That will break the hard pan. Then do the same thing for the mid dle, leaving the freezes to pulverize the soil. If land is intended for corn, make the rows proper width and run the furrows in the middle. That re quires a, little time, but it will pay any farmer cultivating lands. Another plan for one-horse farmers is to swap labor. Buy two-horse-plows and har rows in common and take it time about using them. They will soon be able to buy another horse. Two farm ers could thus unite. Charles Petty, in Progressive Farmer. Bllllet Seed Poallry Foo.l. The following is from the Farm and Fireside: The commercial millet seed is about as cheap ns wheat, and Jt is possible that in the future it win be come a special food for all kinds of poultry. Millet seed contains "more oil than corn, but less starch, and is also more nitrogenous. The advantage in its use is that as the seeds nrc very small each hen is compelled to cat slowly, -and must also perform con siderable work before sho enn secure a full meal. Such method of feeding the fowls brings tbem nearer tho nat ural conditions required, as a portion of the food will be digested slowly and entirely before all tho food 1 witen. A quart of millet seed scnftfNMl In lit tersuch as cut straw, leaves or earth in the morning should amply supply fifteen hens until night, when a full meal of grain and other foods may be: given for the finish of the dry. liens so kept will give better results than if fed twice a day or of tener. Odds and Ends. it is understood that Denver will be selected as the site for the army and fiavy hospital which the Federal Gov heerful Irdlu rdlu dl dl dlu dlu dludl md for which an appropriation of $50, J00 has been set aside. The majority of the commission in charge favors Den ver, although two members advocated some site In Arizona. The West Virginia Legislature adopt ed a resolution declaring against any change in , the tariff laws. . The coal strike In Germany haa spread to 187 mines. . Londoners take their gruelling very Cheerfully; indeed; on the whole a fog mroves the manners of companions n misfortune, says the London Chron icle. On Thursday night, for example, here were seventeen people in a Lon don and Southwestern compartment, .nother tried to squeeze in and failed. "Can't get any further," cried a man inside; "there's a man bere with a wooden leg blocking the way." "Oh!" said the man with the wooden leg. "Excuse me. Half a moment." He un screwed his leg and put it on the floor. Tb Annual Mud Tax. A careful study of the road problem in detail reveals some important and significant features. - While good road stone is found in a very few places in this country, good clays are found in nearly every locality. "If these abundant clays, Mr. Dodge argues, "can be used economically to build good "roads, they will greatly as sist in meeting tne important, problem of how to construct our country roads. "Again, as all loads are hauled over very narrow portions of roads through wheel contact,, railroad cars f or ex ample, it follows that if such narrow parts of our roads are. cheaply con structed to properly resist the weight and grind of the wagon-wheels, new and important results will be attained. "At a cost of construction of say $800 a mile, brick track roads for the entire country - would cost less than four times the $630,000,00a loss' which It is estimated we are now sustaining each year on account of our bad roads. "In other words, we are now paying for the pleasure of using our present deplorable roads an annual mud tax which In less than four years would build the finest and best roads in the world throughout the entire country, and which would effect a saving of nearly $7 each year for every man, woman and child in this country, to say nothing of the pleasure, the satis faction and the moral benefits of driv ing over good hard roads every day of the year instead of through a series of mud holes or a cloud of dust. "To the rapid and economical ex tension of rural mail delivery only one obstacle! worthy of consideration presents itself, but that obstacle is of such a nature as to greatly affect Its practicability and economy. This is the present condition of our country roads. "Without question, one of the first great movements toward the economi cal free rural delivery ef the mails should be the construction of passable roads. This is already evident .from the fact that some of the mail deliv ery routes have had to be abandoned on account of bad roads. "The circumstance that over six mil lion dollars was appropriated by our last Congress largely to be buried in our muddy roads in the delivery of our rural mails, while only the small sum of ;$20,000- 'was last year .devoted to meeting xhe Toad problem,r"ifidicaies the great need of education regarding the .present necessity and -demand -for vigorous and inteyb5ent.,r.oaaorsc.r .; . "As much of these large appropria tions for rural mail delivery "could be saved if we had good roads, it is ob vious that an amount equal to a con siderable portion of these sums coukl be spent to good advantage In educat ing the people in the work of improv ing our country roads and thus forever close a large drain on our national cash box. ' "In view of these facts, could not a million or more be spent to the best possible advantage by the national gov ernment in constructing a section of brick track road near each county seat throughout the country as an object les son in each county in the most ad vanced methods of road construction?" Wmrrmxr Tires Koad Killers. The town of Plymouth has been In the list of towns hat have improved highways under State aid. We have built nearly two miles of macadam road. These sections were put in six or seven years ago, and have proved satisfactory, and at the present time are in good condition. This kind of road needs repairing by top dressing with, three-fourth inch trap rock twice a year, and when the roads commence to unravel or pick up they must be repaired at once to prevent serious in Jury to the roads. Cost of repairs, should say $40 to $50 per mile per year. We have also done several mile of grading and graveling during th last two years, greatly improving th highways thus treated. Our gravel section would have done much bettei service if wide tires had been on heavy wagons; narrow tires on heavy wagoni are "road killers," and their use can not but be most strongly condemned. I fully believe the cost of repairing oui highways is thirty per cent, more by reason of narrow and well worn tire! on heavy team wagons. Henry E, Hinman, Chairman of Selectmen, Ter rvville, Conn., in Good Boads Maga zine. Nothing More .Expensive. There is nothing more expensive t the farmer or merchant or other busii ness man than impassable roads, which prevent the farmers from marketing their products or from procuring th articles they need in farming opera- Hons. The burden of the tax is heavy. The Agricultural Department puts the cost of transporting, goods in wagons over Southern dirt roads at $3.05 per ton, while in the Northeastern State it is but $l.Sa )er ton, a difference in favor of good roads of $1.16 e. ton. The weight of the average load in the East is 2216 pounds, whereas the weight of the average load fn the South is but 1397 pounds. Good Roads Magazine . Indiana in tit Tan. , It is said that Indiana will be the first State to have complete rural mail delivery, as a result of the law passed by tho last Legislature under which counties are required to keep in good repair roads on which :ual mail routes have been established. Good Roads Magazine. . Qnlck Action. The blading miller ot Eganville, Ont., on the completion of a stretch of stone road there instructed his drivers that they were to increase their loads by 300 pounds each, and that they were to maki an extra trip a day. How Not lu Mink. If every person knew that it is Im possible to sink if one keeps his arms under water' and moves his legs as if he were going upstairs, and that one may keep this motion up for hours be fore fatfgue ends it, there would be few casualties. Such Is the fact. CAUGHT BY THE GRIP-- RELEASED BY ; of Medicine " ! Recognizes Grip I . ( -rlft t 3j ' ! Medial . - J iiiiinnnuu La Grippe is Epidemic Catarrh. IT spares no class or nationality. The cultured and the ignorant, the aristo crat and the pauper, the masses and the classes are alike subject to la grippe. None are exempt all are liable. Grip is well named. The original French term, la grippe, has been shortened by the busy American to read "grip." Without intending to do so, a new word has been eoined that exactly describes the ease. As if some hideous giant with awful grip had clutched us in its fatal clasp. Mea, women, children, whole towns and cities are caught in the bamrtul grip of a terrible monster. Have you the grip? Or, rather, has the grip got you? If so, read the following ktters. v These testimonials speak for themselves as to the efficacy of Peruna in cases of la grippe or its after-effects; A Southern Judge Cured. Judge Horatio J. Gosa, HartweU, Ga., writes: -V ..;..iV. - "Some five or ix $ars ago I bad a very severe spell of grip which left me with sys temic catarrh. --v. Justice .Long .Asleep.-. A man more than 70 years was ar rested in Calais, Vt a few. years ago on an indictment thirty-eight years old. charging him with stealing a horse. Among those who have received the high est award the Grand Prise at St. Louis World's Fair, was the A. J. Tower Co.. the makers of the Fish Brand Slickers. Many f our readers who went to the Fair, will reesJI their fine exhibit in which water proof garments were shown adapted -to so many uses that ahnost every department of the world's work was suggested: The Grand Prise was a deserved tribute to one of the oldest manufacturing concerns in the country. The Mexican dollar is disappearing from international circulation. Mr. Winslow's Sootfiin Syruo for ehildren teething, soften the eume, rM-ncep inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 26c.a bottle The first United States mint was estab lished in 1792. J do not believe Flso's Cure for Consnmn tionhas anequal for coughs and colds. Joan F.Botkk, Trinity Snrin-rs. Ind.. Feb. 15, 1903. South Africa emorts $26,000,000 wojihM- diamonds to London annua!lV. ' ' I To Cam n Cold In One Day Take Laxative Brotno Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on box. 25c. In 1903 we were Switzerland's best cus tomer. - Itch cured in 30 minutes by WooTford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Sold by all druggists, $1. Mail orders promptly filled by Dr. E. Detchon, Crawfordsvilfe, Ind. ' Vaccination was made compulsory in the city of Madras in 1884. Taylor's Cherokee Eemedy of Sweet Gam and Mullen is Nature's great remedy Cures Coughs. Colds, Croup and Consumptloa,and all throat and lung troubles. At druggists, 28c., 50c. and 1.00 per bottle. Apple and Anointed. George 111. was wondering how the apple got into th2 dumpling. "Because the policeman on our beat prefers it that way," explained Queen Charlotte. From that moment the King's mind began to totter. New jfosk Sun. VTow'e This Ws oftsr One Hundred Dollars Reward for any eass ot Catarrh that cannot be cured by Ball's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chkxkt aV Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F.J. Cbsnsy for the last 16 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac tions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. Wbst Tasax. Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O, Waxniso, ffixKAif A Mamvis, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Fall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act lag directly itDoa the blood and mnooussur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 78c. per bottle. Bold by all Dru?ffists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Xo Notion or Keal TrouMe. "I bet 1 get into more trouble than any man in this State," volunteered the young fellow. "Nothing in the trouble line overlooks me. Why, I'd be afraid.. to marry"- "What! Ain't you married?" ejacu lated the elderly party. "Boy, -you don't know what trouble is." Louis Tille Courier-Journal. Best on Earth J Gantt's Planters and Distributors WE GUARANTEE THEM. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. , Writs for Prices and Catalogue. ' QANTT riFGa CO., Hacon, Ox PE-IUJ-NA. "A friend advised me to try your Pe runa, which I did, and was immediately benefited and cured. The third bottle earn pleted the cure." H. J. Goss. Cured in a Few Weeks. Miss Jean Cowgill Griswold . Opera House, Troy, N. YT, is the leading la4y with the Aubrey Stock Co. She writes the following: "During the past winter of 1901, I suf fered for several weeks from a severe at tack of grip, which left a serious catarrkal condition of the throat and head, t "Some one auggested Peruna. As a last resort, after wasting much time and money on physicians, I tried the remedy faith fully, and in a few week was as well as ever." Jean Cowgill. Saved by Pe-ra-na. Hon. James R. Guilis one of the oldest and most esteemed' men"' of 'Omaha, Neb. He has done much to make it what it is, serving on public boards a number of times. He endorses Peruna in the following words: 1 "I- am 68 years old, am hale and hearty and Peruna has helped me attain it. Two years ago I had la grippe my life was de spaired of. Peruna save me. J. R. GuilL "I a4 treaUs wtta By bevaU wfclc mul at lawn . My tme was orrd wita pitnUu tkM nWnil nmaiy caul raoT. 1 tHaS Wf CinM N4 (iM vaa bit Joy whB (ha ftatalea 4Immhn4 aftar araih'a ataaer aaa. lkava aaaaa thaat o ail mj Mania aaa SJBIa a few have raltaf ." 0. 4. toat, SB Far Ave.. Maw Task CU. K. f. P!eaeat. PalataMe, Potaat. Tacta One. DaOaa, Vever Sick, Weekae or Ori)a. Me. , Me. Nava fete la balk. Ta cwaataa table atanpad C GO. eRMatee4 Ss eate ev rear aiaaajr keek SterMae; Kemedr Co., Chicago or N.Y. ass trrrL sue, te miuga cozes j iff?? Better Fruits-Better Profits Better peaches, apples, pears and berries are produced when Potash is liberally applied to the soil. To insure a full crop, of choicest quality, use a fertiliser containing not less than to per cent, actual t. Potash' Send for oar nracticai books of Information s iacj are nox aavcrustnr pampnieu. Dooming special leniiiiers, but are authoritative , ueauses. aent lree lor toe asking-. GERMAN KALI WORKS JtUdUMl V. .. 1 .1 l Clm. -- - 22." 8oth Broal street. Wa ewa over i,w aera. 1 A Fm IB Oeirfs Poxtpmld tn-M later T.ip, 1. iii.ith, e)rr. Slah twttj Lrtta, BalaaaM b-Umm. ( ffmmm -" . Abera aerea neakaeaa eontaia anm. -were and lota and lata of oholce veretaeiae, together wltb our great ju . .A ' . 4a nn- alnuA. A3. aWgmfcfW -sjaawaMve. JflHH A. SUZEn SEED w ai ua vrgiae, - iohn White & Co LOUItmtE, KY. bteblltkedlUT Blrfcaat a-arket eriee FURS and Hides. Waalae If aflleted 'Thompson's Eye Water wit eyes. TYANTEO-Insaoh Plata. 8M?JP " tnree line Tobaeeo: jr'"nB. PPl. vZ CENT K. AL TOBACCO WORKS COPsnicki.Vs. So. 4. MlSJIl T(rS Best Tor w v - (UO.OOO Plants for IGc.jl IV Kora amrdatu and farm ara P'" Y I NJj It ieee I w!eJV
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 23, 1905, edition 1
4
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